Tuesday, 29 November 2011
Friday, 25 November 2011
Fried Glutinous Rice – Worth the Tears
In Singapore of the 60s, hawker licensing
laws weren’t that stringently enforced. As a result many households were able
to set up makeshift ‘pirate’ food stalls to earn extra cash. Without any sort
of culinary training to speak of, these hawkers would simply cook and sell what
they knew best: food they ate at home, or well-known dishes and snacks from
their dialect groups. I remember them well, these 1st- or 2nd-generation
immigrants to Singapore, the blood of their motherland still coursing thick in
their veins.
I remember too, the type of food they cooked:
robust, unadulterated, and redolent of their origins -- you ate, so to speak,
the real McCoy.
I knew one such hawker family. At 4 in the
morning the mother would wake up and start whipping up a storm in the kitchen
for the morning’s business. Her husband, or sometimes children, would then set
up stall – a couple of charcoal stoves, a table and stools -- at the foot of
their flat. They sold fried noodles, peanut porridge, and a favorite of mine:
fried glutinous rice.
To make fried glutinous rice, in the truly
traditional way, is bicep-building work. You stand at the wok, slow frying the
rice. The grains get stickier -- and increasingly harder to stir -- as the rice
slowly cooks. It’s torture on the arms, but worth it. Properly done, each grain
of rice acquires a light crust and is filled with flavor from the preserved
sausages and other ingredients.
Understandably, the woman would produce only
a small tub’s worth each day, whereupon a queue would form just for it, and the
glutinous rice would sell out before the clock hits 7 every morning. It was
cheap too. You get two mouthfuls for 20 cents – a fair deal by the living costs
of those days, considering the effort to make it.
For a kid, it was a total treat! I’d savor
each bite, and make sure the breakfast lasted.
The rest of the food would usually sell out
by 9. The hardworking mother would clean the hawking space, and return to her
domestic duties.
I’ve listed two cooking methods. The first is
an easier method that anyone could prepare; it would be similar in taste to the
other, and much less work. However, for the purists and traditionalists among
you, the second method is yours! It would give you a true sense of how
strenuous the preparation is…but the end result is worth every drop of sweat;
trust me!
Fried
Glutinous Rice
Glutinous rice 300 g
Water 3
cups
Dried shrimps 20
g, soaked in warm water
Dried mushroom 15 g, soaked in warm water
Salt 1½ tsp
Chinese sausage 30 g
Chinese liver sausage 30 g
Chicken broth 3
tbsp
Light soy sauce 1 tbsp
Dark soy sauce ½ tbsp
Fried shallots
Fried garlic
Spring onion
White pepper
Method:
- Soak dried shrimp and
mushroom in warm water for 30 minutes. Drain them well but keep the water.
- Soak glutinous rice with 3
cups of water plus the water from soaking the dried shrimps and mushrooms.
Drain the rice thoroughly after 3 hours. Add salt in the rice and mix
well.
- Steam rice, dried shrimp
and diced mushroom for 30 minutes. Sprinkle 2 tbsp of chicken broth and
place the sausages on top of the rice and continue to steam for another 10
minutes.
- Remove the sausages and
dice them.
- Pour 3 tbsp of oil in a hot
wok. Fry the sausages till slightly golden brown. Add minced garlic and
rice and continue to fry until there is a light crust on the rice. In between, sprinkle light and dark soy
sauce into the rice. These sauces add flavor and also make the frying of
the rice easier. There should be a light crust in every grain.
- Sprinkle fried shallots,
garlic, spring onion and pepper before serving.
Note: Make sure the rice is hot before
frying or it will stick together.
Traditional Method:
- Heat 1 tsp of oil in a wok.
Fry mushroom until the water in the mushroom has evaporated. Add minced
garlic, shrimp, diced sausages, and fry until it is fragrant. Remove and
set aside.
- Heat 2 tbsp of oil on
medium flame. Add rice and fry for 15 minutes. In between, sprinkle
chicken broth and salt.
- Return the fried sausage
mixture into the rice and continue to fry for another 10 minutes. Sprinkle
soy sauces in between.
- Once the rice is cooked,
sprinkle fried shallots, garlic, spring onion and pepper before serving.
Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Wow! Wo Pau
To those who know me well, I’ve always been
something of a scatterbrain. Especially when it comes to remembering names and
faces.
Food is a different matter. I almost never
forget a smell or flavor, a sauce, a seasoning, herb or spice.
A case in point is the ‘wo pau’. I ate this pau
(meat bun) when I was 5. It was a first, and only, encounter, yet I remember it
like it was yesterday. And I’m in my early 50s.
It was the 1960s; and the place was the Nam Tin
(Southern Sky) Restaurant, located at Nam Tin Hotel and Nightclub in Chinatown,
Singapore; more familiar today as the Yue Hwa Department Store at the junction
of Eu Yen Sang Road and Upper Cross Street. You’d never guess looking at this
building today, that it was one of the tallest – and most glamorous -- of its
time.
Built around the turn of the 20th
century and designed by Swan and Maclaren, this 6-storey building was the first
Chinese hotel in Singapore to have a lift! It catered largely to Chinese
travelers, and its nightclub on the rooftop attracted the wealthy and the
socialites of the Chinese community in Singapore. I remember, as a kid,
watching the grownups frown and shake their heads at the dancing girls and
hostesses of the nightclub.
Reunited with an old friend after 40 years. A Hong Kong version found at Lin Heung Kui, Sheung Wan |
Ran into another version in Meldrum Walk, Johor Bahru, recently. |
Although I ate regularly at the restaurant, I
only saw the wo pau once -- shaped like a puffy white bowl with the meat
stuffing exposed. A raw egg was placed on top of the meat to act as a lid and
keep it moist. It took lots of skill, for sure, to shape the dough-bowl without
collapsing it – something I tried but couldn’t do when I made my own wo pau. So
I decided that the end justifies the means, and cheated by placing a bowl
underneath to shape the dough.
When the hotel and restaurant finally closed, I
went on a quest for the wo pau. Most dim sum chefs I described it to would wave
their hands at me and accuse me of making up stories! More than 40 years passed
before I finally saw something resembling it at Lin Heung Lo, a restaurant in
Hong Kong.
Since then, I’ve come across a couple of
versions of the still-very-rare wo pau. I saw one in Johor Baru made from
glutinous rice, and another at Alexandra Village in Singapore made from two
types of dough.
Basic Yeast Dough (makes 6)
Ingredients ‘A’ :
Pau flour 250g, sifted
Salt ¼
tsp
Instant yeast ¼
tbsp
Sugar 40 g
Water 120 ml
Shortening 1½ tbsp
Ingredient ‘B’ :
Baking powder ½ tbsp
Meat Filling:
Pork 150 g
Chicken 150 g
Chinese sausage 1, cut into 6 pieces
Dried mushroom 20 g, soaked in warm water and drained
Oyster sauce 1 tbsp
Chinese wine ½ tbsp.
Corn flour 2 tsp
Sesame oil 1 tsp
Hard-boiled egg 1, cut into 6 slices
Method :
- Mix all of
ingredients ‘A’ together and knead into a smooth and elastic dough.
- Cover with
a piece of wet cloth and leave to prove until it has doubled its bulk.
- Sift baking
powder on top of the dough and knead well to distribute the baking powder
until the dough is smooth again.
- Cover and
rest for 15 minutes before shaping.
- Shape the
dough into a log and divide the log into 6 pieces equally.
- Take one
portion, using a rolling pin, shape into a circular shape. Place it onto a
bowl and press it against the side of the bowl.
- Fill the
bowl with the meat filling.
- Steam the
pau for 20 minutes.
Meat filling:
- Mix
all ingredients well, except the egg, and marinate it for at least 30
minutes.
Saturday, 12 November 2011
The Islamic, a Singapore Original
Nasi Bryani comes with an option of meat: chicken, mutton or fish. |
Growing up in 60s and 70s Singapore, the Islamic Restaurant was,
to me, an Aladdin’s Cave redolent with the mystery and exoticism of Old Arabia;
filled not with loot and precious gems, but with a sumptuous treasure no less…of
the culinary kind!
Not many restaurants in Singapore (I reckon a dozen or so?) can
lay claim to being a culinary institution. In my book, Islamic Restaurant is in
this elite.
“The Islamic ” -- as it’s more usually referred to – was founded
in 1914, making it nearly 100 years old. The man who founded it was M. Abdul
Rahman, an Indian masterchef who cut his teeth working for a wealthy Arab
family, the Alsagoffs. The Alsagoffs were early owners of the Raffles Hotel and
famous in Singapore history for their philanthropy.
According to the story, the masterchef’s deft fusions of the
Indian and Arab cuisines so tantalized his employers that he decided to strike
out on his own. Thus was born the Islamic. Although it has relocated a couple
of times over its history, the restaurant has always been famously housed in
one of the 2-storey prewar shophouses that line North Bridge Road, across from
the Sultan Mosque.
In its heyday in the 50s to 70s, the Islamic was a place to be
seen. British colonials and wealthy locals dined there, and its guest list was
graced with Presidents of Singapore, top judges and government officials, and
regional royal families. I remember attending the lavish wedding dinners of
some friends at the restaurant in the 1960s. To me, its décor and ambience
counted almost as much as the food.
Tomato in Sweet Syrup |
But let’s talk about the food. Of this, Nasi Beryani remains the Islamic’s most famed. From the Persian word for “roasted/fried before cooking”, Beryani is a rice-based dish made with spices, rice, and meat and vegetables. And of the many types of Beryani in existence, the Islamic’s is unique, combining both Indian and Arab methods of cooking in a well-guarded secret recipe, created by the founder, M. Abdul Rahman, himself.
Mutton Samma |
My personal favorites, however, include the hard-to-find Tomato in
Sweet Syrup, a wonderful starter as well as a great dip for the Roti Mariam.
Another must for me, since the 1960s, has been the Mutton Samma, mutton
slow-cooked in thick gravy and spicy-peppery in flavor. Also superb are the
Chicken Mysore (a favorite with the Sultan of Brunei, I’m told) and the Mutton
Mysore. In fact, the best way to sample the Islamic’s 200-item menu is to have
plain rice with two or three accompanying dishes of meat, fish or vegetables –
as I often do.
Roti Mariam |
Now to the Roti Mariam. A woman at Kampong Glam created this
unique ‘roti’ (bread) and sold it on a pushcart. The Islamic later employed
her, and included her roti on the menu. Roti Mariam is named after her, and is
available at the Islamic and nowhere else. It tastes like a cross between naan
and prata, and is eaten with plain sugar, milk, or curry.
Today the Islamic is into its third-generation of owners, and no
longer the habitué of just the mighty and well heeled, but everybody. And, may
I add, long may it live and prosper!
Islamic Restaurant
745 North Bridge Road
Singapore 198713
Tel: 65-6298 7563
Friday, 11 November 2011
Curry Chicken – No Explanation Needed
If you asked me, there’s one dish that deserves to be honored as a national dish, but never is. Curry Chicken.
Every ethnicity has its own variant, or often variants. It’s the darling of potluck parties and food caterers; and mainstay of “economical rice” stalls and hotel coffee houses and everything in between. It graces the festive table at home, and once was a common repast for hungry attendees at all-night wakes. And, it’s been around like forever.
Curry chicken was always accompanied by fried bee hoon and fish balls at parties. They made a terrific trio. When I was young, I had a schoolmate whose grandmother hailed from Ipoh, Malaysia. This old lady made a to-die-for curry, and it was one of the first dishes she taught me. She made it literally from scratch – a commonplace in those days.
There was no recipe, no weighing scale. The spices would be mixed to an estimated ratio. She would pound the shallots, garlic, spices and everything, in a mortar and pestle; and fry the thick rich paste for more than an hour in a wok. The sounds and, most memorably, the smell, of her labors would fill the entire house. Under such tutelage, my Curry Chicken education was off to a good start!
For those lacking the confidence, or fortitude, for such backbreaking effort, there’s always the Indian stall at the wet market. Simply name your intention -- curry chicken, or beef rending, or curry vegetable – and the stallholder will put together, from a pre-ground array of spices, the perfect mix for you. Easy as that!
Personally, I prefer the long road; but to make it worth my while for the trouble of pounding the ‘rempah’ (pre-cooked curry paste), I usually make a huge quantity. That way, I could stockpile the rempah -- split into smaller containers and stored in the freezer – for future use. Here’s one of my favourite recipes for Curry Chicken.
Chicken 1, cleaned and cut into chunks
Ginger 50 g, grated
Potato 500 g, skinned and cubed
Water 3 cups
Coconut 500 g, grated
Oil 1 cup
Lemon grass 5, bashed
Salt ¾ tbsp
Sugar 1 tsp
Curry Rempah:
Curry Rempah:
Coriander seeds 5 tbsp, fry in a dry pan until fragrant
Candlenut 20 g
Dried chillies 100 g, soaked in warm water, drained
Fresh turmeric 70 g, bashed
Red chillies 10
Red chillies 10
Shallots 300 g
Curry powder 300 g
Chilli paste 3 tbsp
Garlic 100 g
Method:
1. Grate ginger and squeeze juice to marinate the chicken for 30 minutes.
2. Cut potato and soak in water to remove the starch. Dry and deep-fry the potato until the skin is slightly brown. Drain and set aside.
3. Fry rempah (without the garlic) and bashed lemongrass with oil under medium heat for 20 minutes. Add a tsp of water if necessary to prevent the rempah from being burnt.
4. Add garlic and continue to fry for another 5 minutes, or until oil oozes out from the rempah.
5. Increase the heat to the maximum, add chicken and fry until the skin of the meat is lightly golden. Add potato and 2 cups of water; simmer for 20 minutes.
6. Meanwhile, squeeze ¼ cup of coconut cream from the grated coconut. Set aside. Add 1 cup of water to the grated coconut and from it squeeze another cup of coconut milk. Set aside.
7. Add 1 cup of coconut milk to the curry mixture and simmer for another 10 minutes. Ensure the mixture does not boil or the coconut milk will curdle.
8. Add salt and sugar to taste.
9. Just before serving, add the coconut cream and heat for 5 minutes.
I normally make curry paste in huge quantities and store them in smaller containers in the freezer for future use. |
Curry Rempah:
1. Pound coriander seeds, candlenut, dried chillies, turmeric, and shallots, in sequence, finely. Ensure each ingredient is finely pounded before adding the next ingredient.
2. Add curry powder and chilli paste and mix well. Set aside.
3. Pound garlic until fine and set aside.
4. If you are using an electric blender, add all fresh ingredients with a little bit of water and blend it thoroughly. Mix the curry powder and chilli paste well before cooking.